Updated

Roger Clemens (search) hardly had time to worry about Mike Piazza (search). He was too busy getting banged up by American League hitters.

Clemens' big All-Star homecoming was a bust from the very start, with MVP Alfonso Soriano (search) and Manny Ramirez homering during a record six-run burst in the first inning that sent the AL cruising past the Nationals 9-4 Tuesday night.

Ichiro Suzuki led off the game with a double, Ivan Rodriguez followed with a triple and the rout was on. The Americans reduced the 41-year-old Rocket to a batting practice pitcher and a pained look, becoming the first team in All-Star history to hit for the cycle in an inning.

"I put our guys in a hole," Clemens said.

After Muhammad Ali (search) playfully jabbed at Derek Jeter (search) during first-ball festivities, the slugging really started at the 75th All-Star game.

David Ortiz homered and Jeter got three more hits as the Americans romped to their seventh straight win, not including the infamous tie in 2002. They closed their overall deficit to 40-33-2 — most importantly, it gave the AL home-field advantage in the World Series for the third year in a row.

A lot of the pregame buildup centered on the checkered past between Piazza and the Houston ace. Clemens beaned the New York Mets catcher in the 2002 regular season at Yankee Stadium, then threw the jagged barrel of a broken bat toward him in the World Series.

Even prior to the first pitch, it was clear their feud was still simmering.

Clemens and Piazza stood about five feet apart before the team picture was taken near the hill in center field at Minute Maid Park, but did not speak to each other.

And while eventual winning pitcher Mark Mulder warmed up with Rodriguez, Clemens started getting ready with a bullpen catcher. Piazza came over and caught just a couple of pitches before leaving the bullpen for pregame introductions.

Before Ramirez hit a two-run homer on an 0-2 delivery, Clemens and Piazza took several seconds to agree on what to do.

"We were a little indecisive there," Piazza said. "I went through every pitch."

Piazza applauded, however, when Clemens was honored by commissioner Bud Selig in an on-field tribute after the fourth inning. Piazza said he spoke with Clemens in the trainer's room before the game, going over hitters and also discussing some things the catcher described as "personal."

"It was very amicable," Piazza said. "It wasn't awkward."

That said, Piazza never went to the mound while Clemens struggled and sweated through his tough inning. But when Randy Johnson gave up singles to Jason Giambi and Jeter in the third, Piazza walked out to talk with the Big Unit.

Second baseman Jeff Kent didn't help Clemens, his Houston teammate, by making a two-out error on Giambi's grounder in the first. Jeter followed with a single and Soriano then homered for a 6-0 lead.

It was the biggest outburst in an All-Star game since Fred Lynn's grand slam highlighted a seven-run inning for the AL in 1983.

Clemens could only stand there and signal for a new ball, an embarrassed expression on his face. He still got a nice ovation from Astros fans when he struck out Mulder with his final pitch of the evening.

Alex Rodriguez, one of eight New York Yankees on the AL roster, hit an RBI triple in the fourth. Ortiz, who replaced Boston teammate Ramirez, homered in the sixth to make it easier for AL manager Joe Torre of the first-place Yankees.

Jeter finished 3-for-3 after being elected to his first All-Star start. At 7-for-10, the Yankees shortstop has the highest average of anyone with at least All-Star at-bats.

Sammy Sosa hit a broken-bat RBI single off Mulder in the first. By then, the teams had combined for more runs than in the other two All-Star games played in Houston, both at the Astrodome — Willie Mays scored in a 1-0 win for the NL in 1968, then Clemens pitched the AL to a 3-2 victory in 1986.

This was Clemens' ninth appearance in the All-Star game, a record for pitchers. But instead of the fastballing 23-year-old who threw three hitless innings in 1986, he was lost from the time Suzuki doubled on the third pitch of the night.

Jack McKeon, at 73 the oldest manager in All-Star history, got his last glimmer of hope in the fourth when the NL rallied for three runs.

Edgar Renteria hit an RBI double and St. Louis teammate Luis Pujols hit a two-run double off C.C. Sabathia to make it 7-4.